Sunday, November 29, 2009

By Don Nicoloff

November 29, 2009

It seems that in 2009 we do not have to go far in finding the Truth. The 
Truth has its own way of finding us.

After discovering the true identities of "George Herbert Walker Bush, Sr." 
(aka George H. Scherff, Jr.) [see "Deathbed confessions, photos support 
claims that George H. Scherff, Jr. was the 41st U.S. President," Part 1 and 
Part 2" The Idaho Observer, April, 2007], "Senator John Sydney McCain, III" 
(aka John McCann, II) and "Barack Hussein Obama" (aka Barry Soetoro and 
Barry Rockefeller) [see "The Three Stooges go to Washington, Parts 1-7b, The 
Idaho Observer, May 20, 2008-July 18, 2009], it should come as no surprise 
that another U.S. president has been caught in several lies that warrant 
forensic investigation of his genealogy.

A recently-discovered 1952 Texas newspaper clipping, from either The Denison 
Herald or The Sherman Democrat, describes a birth certificate controversy 
which involved then-U.S. Presidential candidate Gen. Dwight D. "Ike" 
Eisenhower. Eisenhower went on to become the 34th President of the United 
States, serving two terms before leaving office in 1961.

Another birth certificate scandal

Eisenhower was allegedly born on October 14, 1890 in Denison, Texas. After 
receiving a letter from an undisclosed New York law firm during the 1952 
presidential campaign, Harold Schmitzer, the Denison City Secretary replied 
that Eisenhower did not have a birth certificate filed with with the Grayson 
County Clerk's Office [a now-familiar pattern in U.S. presidential 
genealogies] . Lonnie F. Roberts, having read a Denison newspaper article 
that described Eisenhower's unrecorded birth, checked with the county 
clerk's office in Sherman, Texas to see if there was a recorded birth 
certificate. The clerk's office said that there was no such recording.

Roberts then requested compiled birth information from Gen. Eisenhower 
through Mamie Eisenhower in Denver, Colorado. The information was entered 
into a formal, legal birth certificate and sent to Arthur B. Eisenhower (in 
Kansas City, Missouri) to be notarized as an official witness to the birth. 
Judge J. N. Dickson (the source of the newspaper archive) signed the 
certificate which was recorded by County Clerk J.C. Buchanan. Once the 
certificate was recorded, it was sent back to Mrs. Eisenhower.

If there ever existed a further public controversy regarding Eisenhower's 
birthplace, it was definitely quashed. However, sufficient biographical 
accounts have been written in an attempt to legitimize Dwight D. 
Eisenhower's birth in Denison, Texas, a fact that few dare dispute - that 
is, until now.

Eisenhower's 'smoking cannon': A Texas newspaper article

The following is a verbatim transcription of the aforementioned article 
found in a Denison, TX newspaper, "Ike Gets Birth Certificate; Filed In 
Courthouse Here," whose publisher/author is/are (currently) unknown:

'Ike Gets Birth Certificate; Filed In Courthouse Here'

'Dwight David Eisenhower now has a birth certificate officially recorded 
in the office of the County Clerk, Grayson County, Texas. The certificate 
was signed Wednesday by County Judge J.N. Dickson and recorded by County 
Clerk J.C. Buchanan. It is the first official notation of Eisenhower's birth 
Oct. 14, 1890, in Denison.

The filing came about through a long process. A New York law firm wrote 
Harold Schmitzer, Denison City Secretary, asking if Eisenhower has a birth 
certificate registered in that city. Schmitzer replied there was none. A 
Denison newspaper carried a story saying Eisenhower's birth had never been 
recorded.

Lonnie F. Roberts read the story and checked with the county clerk's 
office in Sherman, who told him there was no birth certificate recorded for 
the Republican presidential nominee.

Roberts wrote Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower in Denver, Colo., asking if she 
would compile the birth information from the general. Mrs. Eisenhower wrote 
Roberts that I was very amused when he learned he had never been "born" 
officially.

As soon as Roberts received the information from Mrs. Eisenhower he drew 
up a formal, legal birth certificate which he sent to Ike's brother, Arthur 
B. Eisenhower, in Kansas City, Mo.

Arthur Eisenhower swore that Ike was born at the time and place stated, 
but was not sure about the time of day. Mildred B. Burgess, notary public in 
Jackson County, Mo., notarized Arthur Eisenhower's signature.

Roberts received the elder Eisenhower's reply Wednesday, and promptly 
brought the document to Sherman for recording.

He is now sending the certificate back to Mrs. Eisenhower.'

Eisenhower's political 'guardian angel'

It is apparent that Lonnie F. Roberts either had enough political clout or 
was instructed to create a birth certificate on Dwight D. Eisenhower's 
behalf. Who was Lonnie F. Roberts? How is it that he was able to circumvent 
Texas and Federal law, the Federal Elections Commission, and the U.S. 
Constitution, fraudulently creating a birth certificate by using the U.S. 
Post Office, a few biased relatives, and a Texas judge? Judge Dickson was 
obviously instructed to certify the document, but by whom?

Based on a few forthcoming facts, Lonnie F. Roberts, Arthur B. Eisenhower, 
and Mr. and Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower would have, at least, committed mail 
fraud, a felony. Was this now the benchmark for asserting one's birthplace 
and citizenship? And why weren't doctors, hospitals, or other medical 
officials contacted to corroborate a birth? The usual 
"they-didn't- keep-good- records-in- those-days" excuse does not apply. There 
were no records because the story is yet another U.S.-presidential 
genealogical fraud.

Certainly, administrative officials at the West Point Military Academy would 
have required a birth certificate or other proof of citizenship upon his 
enrollment to the school. Did Eisenhower state that he was born in Denison, 
TX?

Records indicate that there were two "Lonnie F. Roberts" born in Texas, the 
first in 1911 and the second in 1922. We will focus on the one born in 1911, 
as there is an army record of a "Pvt. Lonnie F. Roberts" (February 25, 
1911-January 11, 1989). The 1930 U.S. Census in Los Angeles, CA lists him at 
age 18, born "about 1912." About 1912? This is the same method of 
obfuscation employed by the Bush/Walker clans, the McCain/Vaulx clans, and 
the Obama/Soetoro clans. Coincidentally, Dwight D. Eisenhower was issued his 
Social Security number in California.

Both Roberts were issued Social Security numbers in the state of Colorado, 
which puts one or both in direct proximity to the Eisenhowers, according to 
their residence in Denver. Pvt. Roberts was likely instructed, as were the 
other participants in the scheme, to manufacture a birth certificate and 
insure the cooperation of the Grayson County judge. It is likely that the 
two aforementioned articles were never read outside of Denison, TX. Ike (or 
his handlers) probably saw to that.

By now, the reader may be wondering, "So, where is the crime here? Where is 
the fraud?" These questions will be answered shortly.

A gratuitous, repetitious biographical account minimizes negative publicity 
about the hoax

In "Denison: Birth Place of a President," Archie P. McDonald, Ph.D penned, 
for the East Texas Historical Society, an anecdotal account of Eisenhower's 
birthplace.

[http://www.texasesc apes.com/ DEPARTMENTS/ Guest_Columnists /East_Texas_ 
all_things_ historical/ DenisonBirthPlac eOfPresident1AMD 301.htm]

Mr. McDonald wrote (in part):

'...What is in question here is this: was Ike a Texan, where he was born, or 
a Kansan, where he grew to young adulthood before going off to West Point in 
1911?

And the answer probably should be that Ike was a citizen of the world who 
rarely lived anywhere for long after his graduation from West Point until 
his final residence on a farm near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.

That Ike was born in Denison, Texas, on October 14, 1890, was confirmed by 
his mother. When Ike became famous during the war, Jennie Jackson wrote to 
ask if he had been born in Denison. He responded that he did not know and 
directed her to his mother, who said that Ike entered the world in this 
north Texas railroad town. Specifically, Ike was born in the front bedroom 
of a two-story structure located at the corner of Lamar and Day streets, 
adjacent to the Missouri, Kansas, and Texas Railroad.

The reason for this blessing came to the Eisenhower's [sic] in Denison was 
that Ike's father, David J. Eisenhower, worked as a wiper for the MKT in the 
Dennison rail yards. Within six months of the event the Eisenhower family 
returned to Kansas and Ike grew up in Abilene, which he and others always 
regarded as his "home town."

Ike visited his birthplace three times: first, in 1946 while still in the 
Army; in 1952 while campaigning for the presidency; and in 1965, just four 
years before his death. From the nine-foot statue of Eisenhower in his WWII 
uniform, which greets visitors in the yard, through photos and artifacts 
which occupy every room, the visitor is reminded of the era in which Ike was 
born. ...'

Giving Mr. McDonald the benefit of the doubt, he probably was unaware of 
Eisenhower's birth certificate controversy. That he relied upon anecdotes 
and third-hand accounts is typical, especially where records do not exist. 
But McDonald did address the birthplace issue more than a few times, which 
had obviously consumed a major portion of his piece.

Had this author relied upon similar research methods, this exposé would not 
have been written. But then, Mr. McDonald probably did not have the luxury 
of reading the 1952 Denison newspaper article which described a manufactured 
birth certificate.

Eisenhower's self-incriminating disclosures dispute historical accounts

Dwight D. Eisenhower could have never imagined that information he gave an 
INS agent at Ellis Island would come back to posthumously haunt him 85 years 
later. As detailed in an Ellis Island passenger manifest, on September 27, 
1924, returning from Cristobal, Canal Zone on the USS Cristobal, Maj. Dwight 
D. Eisenhower made two declarations to Customs Officials: 1) that he was "34 
years of age," and 2) that he was born in "Tyler, Texas."

Based on his published birthdate, Eisenhower was only 33 years of age on 
Sept. 27, 1924. This may seem insignificant, though no one reaches the age 
of 34 until one's 34th birthday. It has always been that way. So why did he 
misstate his age, or was he just confused?

On this same day in 1924, Eisenhower declared his birthplace was "Tyler, 
Texas." Certainly, a major in the U.S. Army would have known where he was 
born. After all, everyone else who has studied anything about Gen. Dwight D. 
Eisenhower, the 34th President of the United States, has heard that he was 
born in "Denison, TX." That was the storyline in 1952, but Eisenhower's 1924 
U.S. Customs declaration disputes this more recent claim.

In naming Tyler, TX as his place of birth, Eisenhower did not describe a 
suburb of Denison. The distance between the two towns via US-69 S, in 1952 
and 2009 terms, is 130 miles - a 3-1/2 hour trip by automobile. The same 
trip today, via US 75 S from Denison to I-20 E (through the Dallas 
metropolitan area), then onto US-69 S totals 164 miles and is estimated to 
take 2 hours, 43 minutes. Eisenhower could not have been confused about the 
locations or distance between the two towns, could he?

During the same Ellis Island incident, either Dwight and/or Mamie Eisenhower 
informed the INS agent that their son, John Sheldon, age 2, was born in 
"Hennen, Colorado." A search for Hennen reveals no results, and several 
current residents of the state attest to the fact that they have never heard 
of it. Perusing the USS Cristobal passenger list, on lines 18 and 19 were 
the names of two respective passengers: Lawrence (Keyser, W. VA) and Mrs. 
Mary C. (Norfield, VA). Their last names? "Hennen."

Official accounts of John Sheldon Eisenhower's birthplace indicate that he 
was born in Denver, Colorado. Why did the Eisenhowers say he was born in 
Hennen, CO? Might he have been born in the Canal Zone, outside of the United 
States? Was this another feeble attempt to legitimize the Eisenhowers and 
their 2-year-old son as Americans?

Conclusions

The three biographical inconsistencies (above) prove that Eisenhower's 
'official' accounts are fictional. It is implausible that anyone, let alone 
a private in the U.S. Army, after reading a newspaper article, would 
independently spearhead a plot to create a birth certificate for a U.S. 
presidential candidate. It is equally ridiculous to assume that the ultimate 
investigative task would have been assigned to Mamie Eisenhower, wife of the 
former Supreme Commander of Allied forces in Europe and the first supreme 
commander of NATO.

Born as "David Dwight Eisenhower," it is inconceivable that Eisenhower 
changed his name to "Dwight D. Eisenhower" while attending West Point 
Military Academy, without first submitting a genuine birth certificate. Had 
he done so, there would have been no controversy in Denison, TX prior to the 
presidential election of 1952. And his statements to the INS agent at Ellis 
Island might not ever have been scrutinized.

It is ironic that the president who, in his farewell speech to the nation, 
warned us about the looming "military/industria l complex" failed to warn us 
about his own dubious, genealogical background. At least, Grayson County 
Judge J.N. Dickson saved a most-revealing newspaper article for posterity's 
sake, an act of patriotism if ever there was one.

These revelations will undoubtedly lead to many others hidden beneath a 
quagmire of international political obfuscation. The Truth, despite 
preconceived notions, has a way of appearing at the most propitious times, 
and these are very auspicious times.

The Eisenhowers, more than anyone else, would have truly known where they 
were born. They just forgot to tell everyone else.

© 2009 By Don Nicoloff / Direct Light Productions

directlightproducti ons.com

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